People and events of interest to the Salesian Family of the Eastern U.S., the blogger's homilies, and some of his apostolic and personal doings.

Sunday, August 5, 2012

Homily for 18th Sunday in Ordinary Time

Homily for the

18th Sunday

of Ordinary Time

Aug. 5, 2012

Collect

Eph 4: 17, 20-14

Christian Brothers, Iona
College, N.R.

“Restore what you have created and keep safe what
you have restored” (Collect).

The Collect or opening prayer today invokes God as
our “creator and guide” and pays tribute to his “unceasing kindness.”It also notes that we “glory” in him.

We glory in him precisely because he has been and is kind to us, and his kindness is manifest in his restoration
work.

What has God restored?A beat-up old house, if you’d like a
metaphor, which he’s turned into a magnificent temple.That’s us, of course, created in his image,
wrecked by sin, made new and better by grace and the indwelling of the Holy
Spirit.We are God’s home improvement project.

A house needs protection—a solid roof, a good
veneer of brick or shingles or paint.It
might also need security systems against fire and burglary.So we ask God to keep us safe from anything
and anyone that could harm us:“keep
safe what you have restored,” viz., your own image within us, your own divine
life within us.For our safekeeping we
need his “unceasing kindness” that we invoked.We need his guidance in our discernment of good and evil, of wisdom and
folly, as we try to find and to follow the path he has planned for us; or, to
return to the metaphor, as we maintain the house he’s built and restored for
us.

A homeowner hopes and prays that devastating storms
will stay far away—tornados, hurricanes, floods, wildfires, and such.We
need God’s protection to keep the power of the Evil One away.Jesus tells a short parable about a demon
driven out who eventually returns to its “home from which [it] came [and] finds
it empty, swept clean, and put in order.Then it goes and brings back with itself seven other spirits more evil
than itself, and they move in and dwell there; and the last condition of that
person is worse than the first” (Matt 13:43-45).So our house need’s God’s ongoing protection
after it’s been restored and cleaned up.

Note that Jesus says the demon finds the house
“empty” when it returns.We have to fill
our house with Jesus—the strong man, fully armed, who will keep all intruders
far away (cf. Luke 11:21-22).In today’s
gospel we hear that Jesus offers us himself, the Bread of Life, to fill our
emptiness and be our strength.

Writing to the Ephesians, St. Paul uses a different
metaphor to express the same basic truth:“Put away the old self of your former way of life, corrupted through
deceitful desires, and be renewed in the spirit of your minds, and put on the
new self, created in God’s way in righteousness and holiness of truth”
(4:22-24).Here we’re changing clothes,
putting on new garments, neater and more resplendent than the threadbare and
patched ones we’ve been wearing.

In the old SDB ritual of investiture, when the novices
received their cassocks, the provincial quoted that verse from Ephesians (in
Latin, of course—but I’ll spare you that), reminding us that we were taking on
a new way of life and a new persona as we entered religious life and the path
toward the priesthood.*

Similarly, and more fundamentally, the rite of
Baptism calls for the newly baptized, whether adult or infant, to be clothed in
a new, white garment, symbolic of the new life of divine grace in which he or
she has just been invested, and the neophyte is urged to bring that new garment,
his or her Christian dignity, “unstained (by sin) into the everlasting life of
heaven” (Rite of Baptism).

This is also one possible interpretation of Jesus’
parable of the wedding garment—in which a guest is cast out of the wedding
banquet “into the darkness outside” because he isn’t properly dressed (Matt
22:11-13).No one may approach the
Eucharistic feast without having been baptized, clothed in Christ.No one may enter the heavenly banquet, of
which the Eucharist is the sacramental sign, without having lived “in
righteousness and holiness of truth.”

This new garment that we’re given at Baptism, this
share in God’s own life thru Christ, is a gift of the Father’s “unceasing
kindness.”It’s the 1st and most
essential step in the process by which he “restores what [he has] created,”
viz., his own image in us, the creatures of his hand, creatures called “for
eternal life, which the Son of Man gives” us (John 6:27).

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About Me

Member of Salesians of Don Bosco since 1966. As of July 2016, parish priest in Champaign, Ill., and director of the SDB community there. Priest since 1978. Teaching and administrative experience in Boston, metro N.Y.C. area, New Orleans, and Tampa; since 1986 stationed mainly at SDB provincial HQ as editor, general manager of book publishing, and PR officer. Boy Scout chaplain since 1995.